Boxer Canelo Alvarez, left, poses with Gennady GGG Golovkin during their outdoor news conference on Tuesday in Los Angeles. The middleweights will return to T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas for a highly anticipated rematch on May 5. (Photo by Gene Blevins, LA DailyNews/SCNG)

Boxer Canelo Alvarez, left, talks about his rematch with Gennady GGG Golovkin during their outdoor news conference on Tuesday in Los Angeles. The middleweights will return to T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas for a highly anticipated rematch on May 5. (Photo by Gene Blevins, LA DailyNews/SCNG)

Boxer Canelo Alvarez, left, faces off with Gennady GGG Golovkin during their outdoor news conference on Tuesday in Los Angeles. The middleweights will return to T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas for a highly anticipated rematch on May 5. (Photo by Gene Blevins, LA DailyNews/SCNG)

Boxer Canelo Alvarez, left, poses with Gennady GGG Golovkin during their outdoor news conference on Tuesday in Los Angeles. The middleweights will return to T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas for a highly anticipated rematch on May 5. (Photo by Gene Blevins, LA DailyNews/SCNG)

LOS ANGELES — It wasn’t just the scorecard of Adalaide Byrd that ticked off Gennady Golovkin and his camp this past Sept. 16 when she scored Canelo Alvarez the winner of their middleweight title fight by a ridiculous score of 118-110.

It was also that Alvarez moved too much and didn’t engage enough in the bout that ended up being scored a split-draw at T-Mobile in Las Vegas. Most ringside reporters had Golovkin winning a narrow decision. He retained his three championship belts.

“I definitely think he ran a lot more than I thought he was going to,” said Golovkin’s trainer, Abel Sanchez, who will be in Golovkin’s corner when he takes on Alvarez in a rematch May 5 at T-Mobile (on HBO pay-per-view).

The two played host to an outdoor news conference on Tuesday at L.A. Live. Hundreds of fans braved the cold weather.

Sanchez, of West Covina, took some serious shots at Alvarez, who moved quite a bit in the first fight, particularly in the first half.

“I talked to (Michael) Jordan about making some shoes that are a little faster for him so maybe we can catch him,” Sanchez said; Golovkin is signed to the Jordan Brand and recently rubbed elbows with Jordan at an event before the NBA All-Star Game on Feb. 18 at Staples Center. “I hope for the fans he (Alvarez) puts on the kind of fight that he said he was going to do the first time and they say he’s going to do the second time.

“I’m not saying go toe-to-toe with Gennady. I’m saying to at least be there and throwing punches with the intent of trying to knock him out instead of throwing punches in desperation, which is what he did in the last part of the fight. He threw three or four shots just to look flashy for the judges and then he moved.”

Tom Loeffler, who promotes Golovkin, chimed in by saying Alvarez was booed for the first time in his career after the fight.

“Yeah, at the end of the fight, after the decision was rendered, I would say it was 75 percent Canelo fans in the stands and mostly because they were Mexican, and he got booed when he was being interviewed,” Sanchez said. “They wouldn’t allow him to interview. Why? Because they didn’t like the tactics. They want the fight.”

As does Golovkin (37-0-1, 33 KOs). Still learning to speak English, he rarely says much and he said even less than usual on Tuesday.

“I understand what I need for victory this time,” said Golovkin, 35, of Los Angeles via Kazakhstan.

Not that he would identify that.

“I have a plan,” he said. “I’ll show you in May.”

He has no doubt he won the first fight.

“Yes, of course,” he said.

Mexican fans are traditionally hard on their fighters. That could be because they never saw a legend like Julio Cesar Chavez do anything but stalk his opponent. But Alvarez (49-1-2, 34 KOs) snapped right back at Sanchez when it was his turn to entertain reporters inside Microsoft Theater.

“Look, I did what I had to do,” said Alvarez, 27, of Mexico. “I did what I planned out to do. I went in there, I out-boxed him, I laid on the ropes, I made him miss, I controlled in the center of the ring. It’s not the same thing, that I’m a technical fighter that knows how to make a fighter miss, that knows how to counter-punch, than just a jack-ass coming forward throwing punches and being hit.

“I hope he (Sanchez) goes home tonight and really thinks of what he says because all he’s saying is stupid, idiotic things.”

Alvarez thought he won the fight. On the other two scorecards, Dave Moretti had Golovkin winning 115-113 and Don Trella had it a 114-114 draw.

It was Byrd’s card that really angered the boxing community. Loeffler said steps are being taken to avoid another scoring catastrophe.

“There is going to be a big spotlight on the judges going into this fight, not after the fight,” Loeffler said. “We will be able to object to any officials we think aren’t going to be satisfactory, and the same thing with Golden Boy (which promotes Alvarez).

“Hopefully, on May 5, the judges won’t play a part in it. Canelo says he’s coming to knock out Triple G. Gennady is going to do everything he can to keep it out of the judges’ hands and then we won’t have any controversy.”

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